Calgary Herald

Premiers demand meeting with PM

Seek to negotiate health-care funding deal

- LEE BERTHIAUME

• Canada's premiers presented a united front Friday as they demanded Prime Minister Justin Trudeau come to the table personally to hammer out an agreement for Ottawa to shoulder more of the burden when it comes to health-care costs.

Premiers also defended their refusal to accept conditions for additional federal funds, and pushed back on any suggestion of throwing their own money into the pot even though some provinces are posting budget surpluses.

The provincial and territoria­l leaders issued their call for a sit-down with Trudeau after a closed-door meeting in Winnipeg, one month after talks with the federal government on health-care funding ended without an agreement.

Led by Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson, the premiers reiterated their desire to see Ottawa cover 35 per cent of health-care costs across the country, up from the current 22 per cent, by increasing the Canada Health Transfer.

Provincial health ministers presented the same demand to federal Health Minister Jean-yves Duclos in Vancouver last month. But those talks ended without a deal, with Duclos saying provinces did not want to accept any conditions for the money.

Stefanson said it is time for the prime minister to negotiate an agreement in January.

“What we're calling for today is just a meeting to sit down with the prime minister to have the discussion about fair and sustainabl­e funding for the future of health care in our country,” Stefanson said at a news conference.

During a separate news conference on Parliament Hill, Duclos reiterated the federal government's willingnes­s to work with provinces and territorie­s on a long-term deal. However, he would not say if Trudeau would meet the premiers.

“The prime minister will obviously do what he wants to do,” Duclos said. “What he has asked me to do is to work with my colleagues, health ministers. Now we need premiers to let us do our job and express publicly the type of outcomes and results that we need to achieve together.”

The impasse comes as many health-care facilities, particular­ly children's hospitals, are struggling with a shortage of staff and overwhelmi­ng demand as a result of a combinatio­n of COVID-19, influenza and respirator­y infections.

It also comes as some provinces are facing rosier fiscal situations than expected, with a number projecting budget surpluses. That has prompted some, such as the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es, to question their demands.

The CCPA in a report last month projected that B.C., Alberta, Saskatchew­an, Ontario and New Brunswick would have budget surpluses now and into the coming years that would help address some of the system's current problems.

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